Thursday, July 12, 2012

6 dead in Sayyaf ambush

ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philippines –
Suspected Abu Sayyaf militants ambushed a truckload of rubber plantation
laborers in Sumisip, Basilan yesterday, killing six and wounding 22,
following a day of fighting in which eight soldiers were wounded,
officials said.

Col. Arthur Ang, commander of the Army’s 104th Infantry Brigade based
in Tabiawan, Basilan, the militants’ stronghold, blamed al-Qaeda-linked
Abu Sayyaf rebels for the violence, which came despite efforts by
United States-trained Philippine forces to put an end to decades of
bombings and ransom kidnappings by the extremists.

Ang said the ambush targeted workers from a rubber plantation that refused to pay the militants’ extortion demands.

The workers were traveling on a truck when the gunmen opened fire,
killing five workers and one government militiaman, in Barangay Sapah
Bulak, Sumisip town at around 6:59 a.m. yesterday. Twenty-two others
were wounded.

The government-armed militia, which provides security for the plantation, repulsed the attackers, Ang said.

The ambush came a day after eight soldiers were wounded when their
convoy ran over a homemade bomb in the same area near Sumisip town, said
military spokesman Lt. Col. Randolph Cabangbang.

He said troops were sent to guard voters who were registering for
next year’s elections in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao that
includes Basilan.

Three militiamen were killed in an ambush in April, and in 2010, the
militants seized and later killed three workers after they failed to
collect a ransom.

A decade ago, US troops were deployed in the southern Philippines to
train Filipino soldiers to battle the Abu Sayyaf amid several
high-profile kidnapping sprees and terrorist attacks.

Philippine offensives have weakened the militants but they remain a
threat and are still holding at least five foreign hostages, apparently
in an attempt to raise funds for food and weapons in their jungle
hideouts.